Hand Hygiene Saves Lives, But Is It Realistic For All Nurses?

Is proper hand hygiene possible in all healthcare settings? What about the countless nurses, nursing assistants, home health aides, and volunteers who work in long term care, private duty, home health, and community-based settings? Ensuring good hand hygiene for nurses and other healthcare workers who are employed outside the hospital is a complex problem with no easy resolution. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

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As healthcare workers, we all know that proper hand hygiene saves lives because it greatly helps to prevent the spread of microbes that cause lethal diseases. Reputable entities such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organization, and numerous other health-promoting groups all extol the benefits of good hand hygiene.

Is proper hand hygiene achievable in all healthcare settings?

I know that the knee-jerk reaction to this question from many people would be a resounding "Yes!"

However, I suspect that the vast majority of those who believe it is possible to maintain proper hand hygiene in all types of locales have never worked outside the acute care hospital. Proper hand hygiene is very much doable when a nurse is caring for five to seven patients on a medical/surgical floor, has alcohol foam pumps in every room, and abundant sinks throughout the hospital.

But what about the nurses who work in long term care, home health, private duty, or community health settings?

I worked in long term care (a.k.a. nursing homes) for more than six years. During the night shift at one particular facility, I routinely cared for 68 residents with the help of three nursing assistants. The infection control staff at most healthcare facilities recommend that workers perform hand hygiene before entering every single patient room and upon leaving each room.

Let's assume that I entered each resident's room twice during the course of a routine shift. This would amount to four occurrences of hand hygiene per resident. Four hand-washings or alcohol gel rubs multiplied by 68 residents would equal 272 instances of hand hygiene. In case you're wondering, this was not feasible during the course of one 8-hour shift due to time constraints combined with the skinned, painful hands that would have resulted.

Nurses who work in home health and private duty also face some of the same challenges, even if they only provide care to one patient at a time. Some patients cannot or will not keep hand soap and paper towels inside their homes. In these cases, it is up to the home health nurse to supply his or her own soap, towels, and hand sanitizer to maintain proper hand hygiene.

Once in a blue moon the home health nurse may encounter a patient in a rural area who has no running water. On occasion they might be assigned to a patient whose dwelling has no hot or warm water due to the natural gas or electricity having been disconnected. In these instances the nurse would need to use alcohol gel rub, hope for the best, and wait until they leave the house to perform a complete hand-washing at a venue with a public restroom such as a gas station or restaurant.

Achieving proper hand hygiene for nurses who work outside the traditional acute care hospital is a complex challenge with no simple solutions. However, healthcare workers who work in other settings can do the best they can with limited resources. Increased staffing and thorough education on infection control practices are helpful in long term care settings such as nursing homes and assisted living facilities.

Home health companies and private duty agencies may consider providing detailed infection control education and supply employees with kits that include anti-microbial soap, paper towels, and alcohol-based gel rub or foam.

Hand hygiene prevents illness, injury, and death. With appropriate education, adequate staffing, and abundant supplies, proper hand hygiene can become a reality in all types of healthcare settings. Hand washing protects us and our patients. Let's step up to the challenge.

Our hospital fixed that. Now the nurses have to clean all the high-touch areas. Because well, housekeeping cleaning the high-touch areas would be crazy...
Almost crazy as housekeeping having to clean a poopy mess in a pt bathroom. I mean, everyone knows poop automatically equals nurse!

But don't worry..... as long as the nurse cleans up all the visible pooh, housekeeping will come in behind and bleach everything.

...We can wash our hands till their raw...

Maybe that contributes to yet another potential problem. Think of the skin as not just a multiple layer membrane that keeps body parts where they belong (i.e., inside), but also keep infection out. Wash you hands too often and (the cold climate folks will see this more often) there are numerous "ports" through which infection can enter the body or be carried to others. Alcohol draws moisture from surfaces, so dry skin is going to happen. Use a moisturizing lotion and you can eliminate some of the dryness, but is that also creating a moist medium in which to "grow" various infections?

The answer is likely somewhere in between, and includes universal precautions.

Specializes in (Nursing Support) Psych and rehab.

My diligence in adequate hand hygiene is due to my love of myself. I hate germs, so naturally I abhor other people's germs. I know we can't prevent everything, but I like to think I can prevent as much as I can by doing a simple thing like washing/sanitizing my hands as often as necessary and then some. We have to step up people. This is one reason to be selfish and not look bad. Perform hand hygeine to protect yourself. You will in turn protect others. It is that simple!

Specializes in (Nursing Support) Psych and rehab.
If I'm playing mednurse for the day then hand sanitizer/wipes are the only way to perform hand hygiene between EVERY single pt.I

have to put my meds away... clear my cart... locate a bathroom because the one closest to the dining hall (employee bath) is broken, etc....

I don't have time for that.

We have sanitizer dispensers installed...and 1/2 are usually empty because house-keeping is lazy about filling them.

I have to pull meds as quickly as possible:

- I usually have between 40-42 residents to administer meds to.

- SEVERAL people (para schizo, manic) must have their medication added to their food or they won't take them and they'll start getting out of hand...before you know it, they're raging and we're having to send them out to bring them down. I have one little lady who just got back. They readjusted her meds. DC'd one and put her on a benzo (can't recall the name). It's working. She's calm. Talkative, even. Still very delusional but more...'normal'. You can almost see the REAL her peeking through sometimes. Almost.

We need to keep her that way. She canNOT afford to be allowed to skip meds. I try my d*mndest to beat the food trays to her in order to keep that woman regulated. Etc....

- I need to get the meds out 'on time'. I need to pass the meds at the times when the residents are most likely to congregate in one spot.

I'd like to mention that I don't touch the meds. Since I cut corners on the hand hygiene...I try to, at least, not handle the pills with my hands.

Other than that - if I'm just a regular nurse for the day? Yes - I wash hands between each and every pt. Its not like I'm doing in-depth assessments on all 40+ pt's. Pass a few meds. A treatment here. Some woundcare there. A little suctioning as needed.

The time crunch comes with the paperwork/charting, mostly.

I hate charting.

I hear your gripe, but I don't see the problem. Hand sanitizer came about because of situations where hand washing was not feasible. If the hand sanitizer is always out, then get a hold of housekeeping... better yet get them to give you your own and stash it somewhere. I look at it this way: if it were my mother....

I think it can be very challenging. I worked in a setting where the only sink with running water was out a door, down a corridor, make a left turn, unlock another door and then unlock the bathroom. Needless to say, gel was our primary means of hand hygiene. And no, time was not allotted for washing hands...

Specializes in pediatrics, orthopedics.

I put Eucerin cream on my hands and wear gloves to bed, otherwise the skin on my hands cracks in 2 days!

I am one of the few who believe washing is horrible!

Your immune systems suffer from the constant flora changes as your skin constantly looses its oily protective abilities. I use feminine hygiene sprays to somewhat help with body odors, but I only bath 1 time per week, I haven't been sick in years now. Tremendous studies have been done on this. Europeans are far different than Americans on these "hygiene ethics."

I put Eucerin cream on my hands and wear gloves to bed, otherwise the skin on my hands cracks in 2 days!
I have found hydrocortisone cream helps with lady partsl and anal related itching secondary to reduced bathing. If you really think about the damage we are doing our skin with daily cleansing- it's a no brainer why all the lotion is needed. Why lip balm is needed.
Specializes in Adult/Ped Emergency and Trauma.

I had a college professor that preached the "evils" of bathing. If you only want to bathe weekly- let's consider daily perineal care at least:)

I have found hydrocortisone cream helps with lady partsl and anal related itching secondary to reduced bathing. If you really think about the damage we are doing our skin with daily cleansing- it's a no brainer why all the lotion is needed. Why lip balm is needed.

I am all for someone doing as they please in regards to their personal care but... If you are having issues with lady partsl and anal itching related to decreased bathing frequency, that may be your body sending signals that it needs more care than you are providing. Those are 2 areas that need daily cleansing.

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.
I am one of the few who believe washing is horrible!

Your immune systems suffer from the constant flora changes as your skin constantly looses its oily protective abilities. I use feminine hygiene sprays to somewhat help with body odors, but I only bath 1 time per week, I haven't been sick in years now. Tremendous studies have been done on this. Europeans are far different than Americans on these "hygiene ethics."

I've been showering and washing my hair daily for decades and I haven't been sick in years, either. I only post that to offer the possibility that there might be some factor(s) involved other than the lack of bathing. I use mild soap and don't scrub my skin top to bottom, though. I just can't stand any type of deodorant body sprays.

I think in one country (Sweden maybe?) they don't even let you bring your scrubs home. The hospital launders your gear and you change AT work. And... they have lower infection rates.

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You are correct, in Sweden we are not allowed to take our scrubs home or wear them outside the hospital or healthcare facility. The employer provides scrubs and you have a choice of white or lightblue. The light colours guarantee that stains are clearly visible so that you can change into clean set. The colour concept is very "pro-hygiene" but I must admit to being slightly envious of those in other countries who have a wider range of colours to choose from. The employer is responsible for laundering the scrubs (I should probably say boil :), they're washed at a very high temperature).

I guess we do have rather strict hygiene guidelines. Short sleeves only, short fingernails, no nailpolish, no wristwatch, no rings allowed (that includes wedding bands). Soap and water if hands are visibly soiled, always apply handsanitizers to hands and lower forearms (rub vigorously :) ) before and after contact with a patient and we also use gloves and disposable plastic aprons for every bedside visit. These rules apply to all categories of healthcare staff. Luckily the hand sanitizer has some moisturizing agent in it so I find that after my shift my hands are usually softer than before my day started.

I consider hand hygiene an important part of healthcare and achievable in close to all healthcare settings. I do realize that if you're providing care in an environment that doesn't have running water, maintaining proper hand hygiene may be problematic. The "no-running water" scenario might the one exception, and the healthcare provider will have to make do with handsanitizer.